Well that's great but my understanding is the be all end all of his philosophical musings was to facilitate a nationalist free world dominated by the workers, because of his great disgust 4 the human tragedy of his recent history and the death of millions of said working class in petty squabbles of the elites of Europe. That said if he had seen what devastation his writings have visited on said working class he would've stop writing.
I would advise further reading, and once again no disrespect intended.
Marx's work contain no Political Philosophy/Methodology - so to speak - and the form of Government was unfortunately left vague and ambiguous within his writings. The brand of Communism which took root in Post-War Europe was ostensibly distinct from Marx's own views; a distinction that Lenin himself embraces within his own writings (really, the similarities lie more within the dialectical epistemology of Marx/Engels and Lenin, as opposed to the
actual form and content of a Socialist Society)
Marx also distinctly and staunchly opposed Nationalism, by the way; the Socialist Revolution was to be global, and only therein would it succeed. I find it odd you mention the Manifesto, but apparently failed to read the last line:
"Workers of the world unite!"
Marx viewed nationality, religion, and so on as merely additional facets through which the dominant class expropriates the working class - as merely abstract expressions of the social relations of production. So, no, no nationalism there.
And still you are avoiding my central point that al;l this leftist nonsense is nothing more then populist power grabbing that in the end hurts the people that elevate it to power. So again I say that Barry has the belief that people are to stupid to lead themselves, buy health insurance, determine how many children they have and as such we all must give over sovereignty over our income, individual liberty, and free will to some bureaucrat that knows better. Im unconvinced by your argument that for simple conversations sake the term "Marxism" covers that ideology , because regardless of nuance the end result is the same.
Apologies, but this paragraph is unfathomably hard to understand; I'm not sure of your intended point, could you be more clear? Based on your last sentence, I would once again disagree as you have trouble reconciling your perception of 'Marxism' with Marxism itself, but I would rather have you clarify so I do not unfairly attribute any viewpoints to you.
As i stated above. Additionally as i stated in the beginning I merely thought that the two of you would have a more productive argument if it was acknowledged Barry's leftism instead of arguing the nuance of leftism. I apoligize if i was misunderstood. Lastly i dont feel compelled to argue against leftism. Reality makes my point quite soundly. When was the last time someone ran a Guantlet to receive the blessing of a leftist government, and how many have run one to get away from one?
Possibly, could you answer a few questions for me, which you insinuate in this quote:
1) Where did I state Obama's viewpoints are not leaning to the political left?
2) Where did I make the case for "leftism"? (incredibly vague term, by the way).
I am interested to see where I did, as I mentioned neither. There is no nuance between Social Democracy and Socialism: They are distinctly separate political methodologies and the apparatuses created as a direct result of that methodology is completely separate as well; this is not perception, a simple reading of leading scholars from both camps will elucidate that quite clearly. I would suggest you do that.